Category: Featured Other Series

Featured Other Series

  • Ty Majeski wins ARCA General Tire 150 in overtime finish

    Ty Majeski wins ARCA General Tire 150 in overtime finish

    The ARCA Menards Series came to Charlotte Motor Speedway for a rare Thursday night event and its second race back since returning last year after a few years of hiatus.

    Eighth-place qualifier Ty Majeski took the checkered flag for his first ARCA victory, holding off defending series champion Sheldon Creed and Gus Dean in a two-lap overtime dash for the checkered. Majeski took advantage of dominant pole sitter Michael Self’s issues when he brought out the caution on Lap 85 by spinning in the first turn. Self stayed out on the race track in hopes of trying to stay as the leader, but everyone else, including Majeski, came down to pit road under the caution. Majeski took the lead with four to go and was able to hang on through three overtimes to earn the win in just his 11th start.

    “Ah man, this is unbelievable, I can’t even believe this,” Majeski said in his post-race interview with Fox Sports 1. “From losing my ride this year [in the Xfinity Series], it was like January or February when this deal finally came together. Chad (Bryant, Team Owner) took a chance on me. We both have a lot to prove. This is a great win for everybody. We have a great sponsor on board, Crestliner. This is freaking awesome! We have the [Alan] Kulwicki colors on, that’s where I kind of cut my teeth in the late model racing and jump start my career. For it to come full circle and come to victory lane, and the polish victory lap, it doesn’t get any better.”

    The General Tire 150 got underway shortly after 8 p.m. ET. Self earned the pole earlier in the day, thus continuing the Venturini Motorsports pole streak ever since the season started at Daytona. Former NHRA driver Tanner Gray put the No. 54 DGR-Crosley Toyota on the outside pole for his mile-and-a-half debut.

    When the green flag fell, the action was exciting and intense from the get-go.

    On the start, the No. 9 of Codie Rohrbaugh spun his tires and jacked up the field a little bit. This saw Self pull away from the field and lead early on. The first caution of the night came out on the fifth lap for Venturini Motorsports driver Christian Eckes, who had a left front tire go down in Turn 3. After a few laps under green, he would bring out another caution on lap 10 for another flat left front tire. Another caution was seen on Lap 16 for the No. 35 of David Dodson, who crashed off the fourth turn.

    The race was restarted on Lap 22 and when Joe Graf Jr. was penalized on the restart for passing before the start-finish line. Graf had to come down pit road to serve a pass-through penalty. The next caution flew on Lap 51, as the No. 06 of Con Nicolopoulos ran into trouble on pit road. At this time Self’s machine began to smoke. While Self and his No. 25 Venturini Motorsports team worked to assess what was happening, ARCA officials let the team stay on the track without being black flagged for leaking oil, as the smoke would eventually go away when the race would go back green.

    Another caution would fly on Lap 58 when the No. 69 of Scott Melton spun on the backstretch. Afterward, the race saw a long green flag run where Self would dominate the field until Creed began to run down the leader with 25 laps to go. Self kept a manageable lead over Creed and was looking to be just the second driver to earn the pole and win the race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in an ARCA event since Ryan Newman in 2001.

    Following Self’s spin and gamble on the restart, which saw the rest of the field pit for tires and Creed being sent to the tail of the longest line for being penalized on the restart, Bret Holmes took the lead before Riley Herbst was sent into the wall after contact with Creed. On Lap 102 following the first overtime restart, Codie Rohrbaugh made contact with the wall off the second turn. This set up the final restart with Majeski coming out on top over Creed and Dean.

    “Yeah we had a bad adjustment there,” Majeski said to Fox Sports 1 when describing his late-race rally to the front. “I don’t know if it was the scuff tires that we qualified on or going to stickers that freed the car up. We were way too free. We got a caution there at the end. Paul (Andrews, Crew Chief) made a great adjustment. Ah man, this is so cool!”

    Michael Self and the No. 25 Venturini Motorsports team finished fifth after rebounding from his late-race issues.

    “I just made a mistake,” Self told Fox Sports 1 in his post-race interview after his spin in Turn 1 to bring out the caution. “I just got greedy, I guess. That was just dumb on my part. Just an idiotic move. This Sinclair No. 25 was such an incredible car today, I mean that thing was so fast. I got in and got a little bit free, you know getting right there, borderline free all night. That run was right on the edge and I totally blew it. But you know what, we came out with an okay points day. Thanks to everyone here, thanks to General Tire for putting this race on. This was a blast. Compared to last year, I’ll take it. We’re going to Pocono and I just have to learn.”

    This was Majeski’s second start of 2019, leading 14 laps en route to the victory. Self led the most laps with 91.

    Official Results

    1. Ty Majeski
    2. Sheldon Creed
    3. Gus Dean
    4. Harrison Burton
    5. Michael Self
    6. Tanner Gray
    7. Christian Eckes
    8. Bret Holmes
    9. Travis Braden
    10. Thad Moffitt
    11. Andy Seuss
    12. Joe Graf Jr
    13. Bryan Dauzat
    14. Scott Melton
    15. Tommy Vigh Jr
    16. Codie Rohrbaugh
    17. Willie Mullins
    18. Jason Miles
    19. Riley Herbst
    20. Brandon McReynolds
    21. Devin Dodson
    22. Con Nicolopoulos
    23. Brad Smith
    24. Dick Doheny
    25. C.J. McLaughlin- Withdrew Before Start Of The Race

  • Chandler Smith Wins Rain Shortened ARCA Race At Toledo

    Chandler Smith Wins Rain Shortened ARCA Race At Toledo

    The ARCA Menards Series visited Toledo Speedway for the second and final time of the 2019 season and it was all Chandler Smith who took home the trophy. Smith took the lead on the restart on lap 37 until the rain fell on lap 152. ARCA officials called the race official due to a wet track and a wet forecast for the rest of the day.

    This was Smith’s first ARCA win of the season.

    “Dude, I was driving the wheels off it the whole race,” Smith excitedly said in post race interview with MAVTV. “Even if it went green the rest of the way, we were on rails. These Venturini guys put on a heck of a car for me. I can’t thank Venturini Motorsports, Craftsman, all these guys that make it happen for me. We have been working our tails off all year trying to get this win, but to be honest, all the tracks we’ve been too Nashville to Pensacola all the tracks, we’ve been off and today we really hit the nail on the head. I definitely think we’ve made a statement here today.”

    His Venturini Motorsports teammate Michael Self sat on the pole, thus extending the teams streak of poles this year ever since the season started at Daytona. Smith started alongside Self in the second position.

    It didn’t take long for Smith and the No. 20 Craftsman Toyota to challenge for the lead. Already early on, he took the lead on lap 13, before another lead change happened. There was a thrilling battle for first with Self, Ty Gibbs and of course Smith.

    The first caution of the day took place on lap 30 for future NASCAR superstar Hailie Deegan and Joe Graf Jr (Making Select Xfinity Starts for Richard Childress Racing this season) got together in Turns 3 and 4 after Tanner Gray accidentally bumped them, which sent them sliding up to the safer barriers.

    The next caution took place on lap 78 for points leader Travis Braden, who wrecked in Turn 1 and wound up destroying the car, thus ending his day early.

    There was a unique twist to the ARCA race as modified live pit stops were seen. It’s nothing different when seen in other series, but to understand it better, here’s a quote from the live session feed on ARCAracing.com.  “Drivers who choose to pit will restart in the same order as they entered pit road. They will restart behind cars that choose not to pit. Can only lose position on pit road if you lose a lap.”

    Nothing significant happened during those modified live stops. As Smith was putting a beating on the field, the rest of the field including his No. 20 Venturini team was keeping an eye on the weather that was threatening toward the track.

    The first signs of weather occurred a little after halfway on lap 112, as the caution came out for rain.

    After a short caution for rain, the race was able to get back going for about 34 laps until rains came again. This time, the rain was a little bit heavier and the ARCA Menards Series does not have Air Titans like NASCAR does. In fact, they still use the old Jet Dryer to dry the track. However, with a track that has no lights and more rain in the forecast for the rest of the day, ARCA Series officials called it official on lap 152 or 50 to go.

    With that in mind, another future NASCAR star, Chandler Smith was declared the winner of the Sioux Chief PowerPEX 200 at Toledo Speedway.

    It was Smith’s first win of the 2019 season.

    “Dude, it’s the whole team, all of Venturini,” Smith told MAVTV in talking about the win. “It wasn’t just one person. Everybody is a team, it’s everybody. You know, you got Billy (Venturini, Owner/General Manager of Venturini Motorsports) and you got me, and we have really good chemistry together. All the guys on pit road, all the way back to the people that work on a weekly basis at Venturini Motorsports. Hats off to all them guys, just thank you so much. Thank you to everyone back at home, thank you guys for watching, thank you for all the support. I can’t wait to get back home. We’re bringing back the hardware this time.”

    With this win, Smith is now the points leader of the Sioux Chief Short Track Challenge.

    Ty Gibbs, grandson of NASCAR team owner Joe Gibbs wound up second, 1.136 seconds behind race winner Chandler Smith.

    “Yeah, I think I could have caught him (Chandler Smith),” Gibbs told MAVTV in regards to trying to catch the leader. “You know that last caution, it started raining before the last caution, whatever caution that was, the last one. That kind of hurt us there. The short run speed was not the best, but our long run speed was pretty good. I think we were reeling him in there. You know, it sucks to be second, three times this year. But it’s fun, I am having a blast at here learning a lot, so we’ll go down to the next race at Madison.”

    Official Results

    1. Chandler Smith
    2. Ty Gibbs
    3. Christian Eckes
    4. Michael Self
    5. Sam Mayer
    6. Carson Hocevar
    7. Bret Holmes
    8. Tanner Gray
    9. Tommy Vigh Jr
    10. Corey Heim- Broken Valve Spring
    11. Tim Richmond
    12. Alex Clubb- Out
    13. Travis Braden- Out
    14. Rick Clifton- Out
    15. Dick Doheny- Out
    16. Mike Basham- Out
    17. Joe Graf Jr- Out
    18. Hailie Deegan- Out

    Up Next: The ARCA Menards Series have a short turnaround as they head east to Charlotte Motor Speedway for a rare Thursday night event.

  • Pagenaud ends drought in the rain at Indy

    Pagenaud ends drought in the rain at Indy

    INDIANAPOLIS — During his time with Peugeot Sport’s sportscar program, Simon Pagenaud was forced to test in wet weather conditions (be it natural or manually wetting the track) to practice racing in the wet.

    “…we did days and days of reliability just going around the circle, and we would do days in the rain, days in the dry, days on soft tires, days on medium, days on hard,” Pagenaud said. “It was amazing the amount of testing we did and the laps. So I did drive a lot in the rain in my career, but quite frankly, in France, it rains all the time, especially where I’m from. So I’ve done a lot of laps in the rain in my career. I always loved it. The first few laps I did in rain I crashed a lot, but I was fast, so I just had to figure out how to dial it back a little bit, and it’s working.

    He demonstrated the results of said testing, as he went from fifth to first in the final 17 laps on the Grand Prix course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    Following the final restart of the sixth annual IndyCar Grand Prix, Pagenaud commenced his drive through the field. With six to go, with only three seconds of push to pass (P2P) remaining, Pagenaud used it, outbraked and overtook Jack Harvey heading into Turn 1.

    “…when it started raining, obviously had no knowledge of the track, no knowledge of our setup in the rain,” he said. “I thought, okay, the sports cars have been racing a lot in the rain, a lot of racing in the rain, so I thought I’m just going to attack right away and see. And right away I noticed our car was much better now that it’s on the braking, so I could really attack and get the tires hot quickly, and that’s how I jumped a lot of people right away, and then I gained confidence.

    “Then I noticed that other people were struggling with tire wear, and we didn’t. So then I kept on pushing but was still trying to keep the tires underneath me. But yeah, it was just incredible to see the pace we had in the rain conditions. I took a lot of risks for sure, maybe more than Dixon needed to take some risk because we were in a position where I can take some risks right now and the car was so good that I just gave it 100 percent, 100 percent every lap.

    Then he turned his attention to race leader Scott Dixon. He cut the lead from 5.1 seconds with six to go to 3.9 with five to go, then 1.8 with four to go and half a second with three to go.

    With two to go, he pulled to Dixon’s bumper at the end of Hullman Boulevard (Turn 7). As they rounded Turn 8 and 9, he powered around Dixon’s outside and usurped the lead and drove on to his 12th career victory in the NTT IndyCar Series.

    “Honestly in the last two laps to go, I almost started out saving second, and then all of a sudden I realized, wait, I’ve got too much pace for this, and we caught Scott by a lot, and I guess you call it the penultimate lap, the one before the last, and when I realized that I had a shot, but I was out of Push-to-Pass, so my only chance was to get him on the infield,” he said. “But quite frankly, none of the passes I made today I planned. I just drove with full instinct mode, and it worked out.”

    It’s his third career victory at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and first since Sonoma Raceway in 2017 (snaps a 22-race winless streak).

    Dixon, who led a race high of 41 laps, finished second for the 43rd time in his career.

    “…it was generally a pretty good day,” Dixon said. “We had some good pace.

    “Conditions were really tricky all day, but a lot of fun actually. I think it’s always hard to tell with a circuit like this, especially after the kind of sealant they put on some of the portions of the oval, how tough it’s going to be once you start to get some moisture on there. But all in all, the Firestone red tires, I never got to the blacks, had a ton of grip and it was a lot of fun.”

    Harvey, who’s previous career best finish was 10th, rounded out the podium in third.

    “It was a bit more of a handful than I probably would have hoped for,” Harvey said. “It looked like we were running pretty good in the dry. I mean, I thought it was the best start I’ve had in IndyCar, too; to be able to split Felix and Scott at the start was pretty solid. And then I think we ran on pace, top 3 in the dry. Car was great.

    Matheus Leist and Spencer Pigot rounded out the top five.

    Ed Jones, Will Power, Felix Rosenqvist, Graham Rahal and Santino Ferrucci rounded out the top 10.

    Race summary

    Rosenqvist led the field to green at 3:50 p.m. After a caution for a wreck in Turn 14, Dixon bested his teammate on the restart and took the race lead.

    “The start was a little tricky, kind of misjudged it with Felix, and actually the 60 car had a great start,” Dixon said. “So kind of just fought in line there and was seeing how it was going to play out. The restart we got that really good jump, got both the 60 and the 10, kind of set us out.”

    From there until the final caution, drivers pitted for new tires at random intervals to maintain as much grip as possible, with the threat of rain looming.

    Tony Kanaan was the first to jump to full wets on Lap 55, but was roughly 30 seconds slower than the race leader.

    Helio Castroneves followed suit on Lap 60, but spun on pit exit and stalled his car in the grass in Turn 1. Everyone ducked onto pit road within seconds of his spin to switch onto wets, before the caution flew on Lap 61. This set up the run to the finish.

    Who had a good day

    After starting 21st, Matheus Leist earned his career best finish with a fourth.

    Who had a bad day

    It wasn’t a great day for the two drivers at the top of the standings.

    Alexander Rossi’s day was all but ruined on the start, after contact with Patricio O’Ward.

    Later in the race, points leader Josef Newgarden’s crew lost control of a tire and it rolled out of the box and stopped next to the outside pit wall.

    He was sent to the tail-end of the field on the ensuing restart, as a result.

    Nuts and bolts

    The race lasted two hours and 26 seconds, at an average speed of 103.254 mph.

    There were 10 lead changes among six different drivers and three cautions for 15 laps.

    Newgarden leaves with a six-point lead over Dixon.

  • Rebuilding My Totally-Not-Collectible Mustang, Part 5

    Rebuilding My Totally-Not-Collectible Mustang, Part 5

    The Stephen Cox Blog is presented by “Porsche Legend: The Penske L&M Porsche That Made Racing History

    The first performance tests for my 1980 Ford Mustang “restomod” are complete and the early signs are very positive.

    Along with the 1974 and 1981 models, the 1980 Mustang is arguably the least desirable of any Ford pony car ever built and is certainly not worth the money and effort for a restoration. But the car has tremendous sentimental value for my family. I bought the car in early 1982 as the second owner. My wife and I dated in this car and I’ve since put over 240,000 miles on the odometer. So this is a labor of love. Nostalgia is all the value this car needs.

    The Mustang’s original 2.3 liter, four-cylinder engine and 4-speed manual transmission have been replaced by a 347 cubic inch Ford Windsor small block with a Tremec 5 speed gearbox from McGunegill Engine Performance of Muncie, Indiana (which, thankfully, also happens to be the home of a local drag strip).

    The car is still severely handicapped by its original 2.73 open differential, which is scheduled for future replacement. To make matters even worse, the subframe connectors have not yet been installed. So other than the engine, the car is still very much in stock condition.

    347 CI Windsor small block Ford stroker engine from McGunegill Engine Performance, Muncie IN

    We made just five passes in an effort to post a 0-60 baseline. I had no intention of taking the car to the very edge of its performance envelope. The goal was simply to establish a baseline of performance by which to judge the success or failure of future modifications to the car.

    The first two runs were experimental. I spun the right rear tire on takeoff and used third gear, quickly realizing that neither was a good idea. Not only does a single-tire burnout leave an embarrassing skid mark on the pavement, but it also means you’ve wasted your only method of propulsion. Not good. The 0-60 times hovered around 7.3 seconds. That’s not terrible, but I knew we could do much better.

    At this point in the car’s evolution, the way to get the best 0-60 time is to avoid spinning the rear tire and stay in second gear all the way to 60 mph, thereby eliminating the final shift. I tried that on the third pass, but I smoked the right rear again on the shift to second gear and ended up at 6.9 seconds.

    The final two passes were more successful, producing very respectable 0-60 times of 5.99 and 5.97 seconds. The key was to run the car harder and longer in first gear in order to allow a hard shift into second at full throttle that wouldn’t spin the rear tires.

    I’m sure the car could do even better with a few more runs and a bit of tinkering. It could probably get into the mid 5-second range with some effort, but that would probably be asking more from a stock 2.73 open differential than it’s prepared to deliver. I decided to quit while I was ahead.

    Cox’s new book on the Penske L&M Porsche is now available on Amazon.


    We were successful in establishing 5.9 seconds as the car’s baseline 0-60 mph performance barometer with a reliable and consistent digital scoring system, and that’s enough for now. With the addition of a 9 inch Ford rear end with 3.73 gears and subframe connectors, that 0-60 time will probably drop into the 4-second range. That puts it on par with the 2019 Mustang Bullitt, the 2018 Mustang GT, the 2017 Dodge Challenger T/A 392 and many other modern muscle cars.

    The little Mustang still runs on standard pump gasoline and it’s mild enough for the Mrs. and me to take to the local drive-in theater and a few old drive-in restaurants, two of our favorite summer pastimes. Yet it’s light years ahead of anything Ford envisioned in 1980. So far, so good.

    Stephen Cox

    Sopwith Motorsports Television Productions

    Driver, FIA EGT sportscar championship & Super Cup Stock Car Series

    Co-host, Mecum Auctions on NBCSN

  • Great Drives: One Night at Texas World Speedway

    Great Drives: One Night at Texas World Speedway

    The Stephen Cox Blog is presented by Corvette Miracle: The 1970 24 Hours of Daytona.

    Al Unser Sr. used a hotel lobby display car to win at Indianapolis in 1987. The 46-year-old Juan Fangio broke and re-broke the Nurburgring lap record three times during his miracle Formula One victory in 1957. Every motorsport enthusiast can recite a list of the great driving performances in auto racing history.

    But many of the sport’s truly amazing drives will never be known, not because the feats were less dramatic but because they occurred at amateur events with anonymous drivers, like this one.

    Sunday, May 31, 2015.

    Texas World Speedway was blazing hot. The endurance sports car race was 16 hours long, spread over two days featuring nearly 100 teams with four or five drivers each, competing on a three-mile road course.

    After 14 hours of competition, Rocksteady Racing drivers Jim Rowland and Brian Beasely had done their jobs well, putting the team’s Mazda Miata race car in position for a podium finish. Crew chief Chris Mills managed pit stops and driver changes while calling team strategy over the radio. The car was fast and competitive, spending most of the weekend between third and sixth place in their class. The team’s goal was to score their first series podium in the massive, 32-car GP2 class, and they were on the verge of making it happen.

    With just two hours remaining, team owner Todd Carver took over driving duties for the final stint of the race. Carver pulled out of the pits in fourth place, needing to make up just one position to secure a podium finish.

    Climbing out of the car during the driver change, Beasely had warned him that the brakes were fading badly. That was an understatement. They were completely gone.

    “We had no brakes because of a busted hub that had so much movement that it was machining the upright,” Carver remembered. “The rotor wasn’t broken and the tires were okay, but nothing was pointing in the right direction because the hub was so busted.”

    The car was hard to turn and impossible to stop. The silver Miata’s tail was visibly sliding around in Turns 10 and 11, the tightest corners on the Texas “roval,” with Carver cranking the steering wheel in the opposite direction to keep the rear end of the car behind him.

    The straightaways were even worse. With no brakes, Carver had to let off the gas and start pumping the brake pedal as soon as he crossed the start/finish line in order to keep the car from overshooting Turn 1 at a hundred mph. Only after several pumps on the brakes did Carver say he could finally “square the rotor up enough to actually slow the car down.”

    Although he was passing lapped traffic regularly and turning lap times that were downright amazing under the circumstances, Carver was unable to close the gap on the third-place car. In desperation, the team began to contemplate an unscheduled pit stop to see if any of the damage could be repaired. With 40 minutes remaining in the 16-hour event, it looked as if a podium finish would slip away.

    “Hey, Todd,” The voice of crew chief Chris Mills crackled over the radio. “We need to stay out. Don’t come in, just stay out.” With a six-lap gap over fifth place, Mills figured it was unlikely that Carver would be overtaken and lose the position. But if he could manhandle the car across the finish line, any mechanical failure among the top three cars would still put Rocksteady Racing on the podium. So Mills rolled the dice and won.

    With half an hour remaining, the third-place car rolled to a stop on the grass outside Turn 9, smoke billowing from under the hood. Carver and his ailing Miata limped past, finally taking the checkered flag to score a podium finish in the GP2 class at Texas World Speedway. It was a triumph for a private, amateur team of talented drivers who spend their weekdays at regular jobs in order to live their dreams on Saturday and Sunday.

    But the only people who saw it are the ones who were there. So gather up the family and go see a race this weekend. It doesn’t matter if it’s an oval or a road course, dirt or asphalt. Most of racing’s great stories (and some of its great drivers) are not on radio or TV. You gotta go see it for yourself.

    Stephen Cox

    Sopwith Motorsports Television Productions

    Driver, Super Cup Stock Car Series and FIA’s EGT Championship

    Co-host, Mecum Auctions on NBCSN

  • ARCA Menards Series Preview-Nashville

    ARCA Menards Series Preview-Nashville

    The ARCA Menards Series continues their 2019 season this Saturday night at the famed Nashville Fairgrounds.

    It will be just the fourth visit for the ARCA Menards Series drivers at the Fairgrounds since returning in 2015.

    Currently, 20 cars are on entered in the preliminary entry list.

    After visiting the 2.66-mile superspeedway last weekend at Talladega, the ARCA drivers will have to adjust their skills for the .596-mile paved track located in Nashville, Tennessee.

    The series will see its sixth different winner at the track, as none of its previous winners are entered. Those previous winners include Zane Smith in 2018, Chad Finley in 2017, Josh Williams in 2016, Grant Enfinger in 2015 and the first winner David Green way back in 1992.

    Here are a few drivers fans should keep an eye on Saturday night during the General Tire Music City 200.

    1.Ty Gibbs – Gibbs has not competed at the Fairgrounds in an ARCA car but does have a plethora of short track series starts. In just two ARCA starts beginning with his first outing this year at Five Flags Speedway in Pensacola, he finished second. Then, at Salem Speedway, Gibbs finished sixth after starting third. The No. 18 team owned by Coy Gibbs and driver Ty Gibbs will look to carry the momentum over to this weekend after Riley Herbst earned a third-place finish previously at Talladega.

    2. Michael Self – Speaking of momentum, Self is now the ARCA Menards Series points leader after his top-five finish this past weekend at Talladega. Self has just one start here coming last year, where the Venturini driver finished fourth after starting 10th and leading seven laps.

    “I’ve got a lot of experience on short tracks, and have been fortunate to win a handful of them between the NASCAR K&N Pro Series and now ARCA, but they definitely haven’t been the tracks I prefer going to since joining the ARCA Menards Series,” Self says. “I’ve always just enjoyed the speedways more, but with the way we ran at Pensacola and Five Flags Speedway, I’m excited to get to Nashville this weekend, and every track from here on out, really. It’s a lot of fun when a team has the chemistry that I feel this 25 team has, and it really makes every race weekend enjoyable, no matter what type of track we’re going to.”

    3. Chandler Smith – Like Self, Smith only has one start at the Fairgrounds. However, looking back, it’s could’ve, would’ve, should’ve for Chandler and the Venturini team. Quite possibly one of the hottest prospects on the racing circuit right now and a potential Cup Series driver in the future, Smith qualified on the pole and led 51 laps in last year’s race to end up finishing fifth. While not being able to compete at Talladega due to age restrictions, he has been on a tear in the ARCA Menards Series. In just two starts, Smith has finished fourth twice and sat on the pole at Five Flags in Pensacola, Florida. The young 16-year-old won twice last year (Madison, Salem) and led a whopping 763 laps throughout the 2018 ARCA season.

    4. Corey Heim – The Chad Bryant Racing driver has just one start at Nashville, coming in the popular CARS Super Late Model Tour. Heim, driving for the family-owned team, finished 11th. Heim does have two ARCA starts this season with finishes of fifth at Five Flags and Salem.

    5. Carson Hocevar – Hocevar will be making just his sixth ARCA start of his young career this weekend in Nashville. His best finish so far in the 2019 season was third at Salem after starting on the pole. Hocevar was out front in the lead for 26 laps before winding up third after the rain-shortened race. Hocevar is part of the KBR development program where he drives the No. 28 Chevrolet.

    Who To Keep An Eye On

    1.Christian Eckes – After a miserable last few weeks, Eckes will be looking for a reset this Saturday night. The Venturini driver has made three starts with a best finish of third in 2017. Eckes also led 28 laps in that race as well.

    “The great thing about Nashville is it’s unique, and it’s very raceable,” he said. “You can move all around the race track. There are different grooves and a lot of ways to find speed. That’s why it’s so popular. I’m really excited to hopefully make some Nashville magic this weekend in my JBL Audio Camry.”

    2. Bret Holmes – Like Eckes, Holmes has also made three ARCA starts at Nashville. His best finish came in the 2016 race after starting second. Holmes and the No. 23 team finished 10th in last year’s race. The Munford, Alabama driver led six laps in the 2015 race. Keep an eye on Holmes and the family owned team.

    Notable

    Lexi Gay – Lexie will be making her ARCA debut for the Empire Racing Group. She has made some noise early on in her career in the NASCAR Whelen All American Series and in the Limited Late Models. To note, Empire Racing is part of the Richard Petty Motorsports Driver Development program.

    It will be an all day event per usual in the ARCA Menards Series.

    The one and only practice session will occur at 2:15 p.m. ET live on ARCAracing.com. Qualifying is slated for 5:15 p.m. ET, also live on ARCAracing.com.

    The General Tire Music City 200 will take place Saturday night and can be seen live on MAVTV at 9:00 p.m. ET and 8:00 p.m. Central.

  • Brittney Zamora flying under the radar

    Brittney Zamora flying under the radar

    Brittney Zamora is one of the next up and coming racers who is currently racing in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series this season. Zamora made her debut during the K&N Pro Series East race at New Symrna for Bill McAnally Racing, where Zamora started 15th and finished 15th.

    However, for Zamora, it wasn’t her first rodeo as she has been racing for quite some time. In fact, her father, Mike Zamora, was a racer himself thus seeing Brittney become the second generation racer in the family. Zamora got her start racing in go-karts at the young age of four.

    In this interview with Speedway Media, Zamora details how her life has always been around racing, what it’s like being a female racer and stand out against the guys, if she’ll be in a Cup car years from now and why you should cheer for her.

    “Yeah, my dad raced for the past 20 years before I started in the super late models,” Zamora said. “I actually went to the track when I was four days old. That was my first time at the track, I didn’t wait very long for that. It’s pretty much been my whole life. Going to the racetrack, going down on the weekends, and watching my dad win championships around the Northwest, I just knew that’s what I wanted to do.”

    “I got into go-karts at the age of four, then I moved up to Mini Stocks, and then I jumped into the Super LateModels in 2016. Did that for three years and now I am here doing the (NASCAR) K&N Pro Series West.”

    With Brittney being in the Northwest and the NASCAR racing capital in Charlotte, NC she describes how hard it is to stand out among other racers who are already making a name for themselves and are there in Charlotte.

    “It’s tough being over on the west coast,” she said. “The racing capital is on the east coast. The majority of it applies over there. It’s a little bit harder to get noticed and get your name out there for people to recognize it. Just because you are on the other side of the country out here, you really have got to be impressive and take every opportunity you can get.”

    “I do think Greg Biffle and Kasey Kahne are the two most recognizable names here in Washington State actually. It can happen. Just because you’re living out here, doesn’t mean you can make it. I do think living on the east coast and racing over there has its advantages for sure.”

    With many racers who grow up wanting to become a racecar driver, they can remember watching the first race on TV that catches their eye. For Brittney, however, that’s not how it was for her at such a young age.

    “Yeah you know, it’s kind of weird,” Zamora said. “I really don’t have a first memory of watching it because that’s what I grew up with. It was always on TV on race weekends. My dad has his own car back out in the shop, so it was a lifestyle for us. So not really a first memory growing up, but going to my first Cup race was fun and everything, but that’s kind of what I knew.”

    Growing up around racing during Brittney’s early years was something she got used too at an early age but she can somewhat remember the first time she sat in a racecar.

    “I remember helping as much as I could, being a little girl helping out with my dad,” Zamora said. “I would always want to sit in his car. You know the dream was to get into the Super LateModels. So I made sure I always got to sit in his car, work on it whenever I could.”

    “I actually got my first stock car and that was a really cool experience. There was a guy here in town that had the car and wanted me to drive for him. So, getting introduced in the stock car world myself and having somebody wanting me to drive for them, and giving me the car to do so; it was a really cool opportunity and it made it much more special.”

    Zamora made her first NASCAR K&N Pro Series West start at the challenging Las Vegas Motor Speedway dirt track earlier this year, right outside the big track of Las Vegas Motor Speedway. She started 16th and finished 11th. She describes what it was like being on dirt the first time.

    “Oh my gosh, that was my first time ever on dirt, I’d never stepped a foot on it, like a dirt racetrack, never a day in my life before,” Zamora said. “I really didn’t know what I was heading into and it was pretty tricky. Never being on dirt before, I didn’t know what I was actually supposed to be looking for in a car. You know, never having experience on that.”

    “So trying to talk with my crew and figure out what that feeling is, what I need to feel in the car. It was quite the learning experience and being only the second race with that team in a K&N car, it was so much new happening in that race. Our main goal was just to stay on the lead lap and finish all the laps. The top-10 was our primary goal, unfortunately, we got 11th but we were right there and met all but one of our goals. So, it was a decent first dirt race and second K&N race ever.”

    When Brittney experienced her first dirt track, she never really had any dirt track guys to lean on for advice.

    “Yeah, I didn’t have anyone to reach out for to that,” she continued. “I tried to get into a dirt car, whether it was a go-kart, modifieds, late models, anything that I could, I tried but the opportunity just never worked out in our favor. So, we didn’t get any experience on dirt. Yeah, I didn’t have any dirt guys to lean on for advice. My team is primarily asphalt and that’s what we do. That was a learning curve for all of us. It was really tricky for sure.”

    With the NASCAR K&N Pro Series being so different from the three NASCAR touring series, Zamora explained what she enjoys about racing in the K&N Series.

    “There’s so much about it, it’s a whole different world than what I’ve known my whole life,” she said. “I came from a Saturday night family life. Saturday night was our racing, just local short track stuff. My family has been my crew my entire life. I have my dad, my uncle, my grandpa, they are my crew. They are who I hear in my ear when I’m on the track.”

    “Being in the K&N Series is a different series. I had to adapt to not working with my family anymore and being with a new team. And then we went from 2016 where we did like eight Super Late Model races, to 2017 where we did about 12. And then in 2018, we stepped it up to about 20 (races) to kind of help to get ready if any opportunities came our way.”

    “Now that the K&N Series is here, we have about 26 races. So, the schedule is pretty cool. You’re racing a lot more, passing a lot more, going all over the country to new tracks that I’ve never been to like Bristol and Sonoma. We’re going to go to Phoenix, Iowa and Gateway. I mean there are so many tracks that I would never have the opportunity to race on in my super (late model) and I have the chance in the K&N Series.”

    With all those tracks Brittney mentioned above, most of, if not all of them, will be her first time visiting them. In this case, she tries to learn as much as possible whether it’s watching video or leaning on her team.

    “Video from past races,” she said, “you can learn from watching a driver’s technique, different lines, pit stop strategy, how to be strong at the end of the races as well at the beginning. Just taking notes on who is doing what, and then getting on track and actually applying what you saw and what you learned. Using the experience that my team has given me from years past at those tracks, and I lean on them a little bit to help get me adapted to those new tracks I haven’t been to yet.”

    Zamora drives for one of the staple teams in the NASCAR K&N Series, Bill
    McAnally Racing, who has been quite successful over the years. She described the experience and the added pressure to perform at the highest level with this team.

    “I actually got invited back to a Toyota combine back in August,” she said. “I didn’t really know what I would be learning or what the outcome of it was. I went there and I actually won one of the races there at the combine. Only four drivers got to compete in the championship race and I was one of them. I finished second and so, really caught Toyota’s attention, and then they got me a couple of late model races as an evaluation. We did really good in those and that’s kind of where it led to. Alright so I’ve done super late models, I did good in all the evaluation in the combine, so let’s see how I can do in a K&N Car.”

    “Toyota put me in a test with Bill McAnally Racing at Irwindale,” Zamora continued. “Everything went great. I was the best car out there so that’s where it kind of led to. Alright, so we’re gonna have something in the works for next year. So we gotta get sponsors lined up, it all fell right into place. Being with Bill McAnally Racing, he is one of the best teams in the K&N Pro Series right now, if not arguably the best.”

    “You know being a full time driver there, you definitely have a little chip on your shoulder. Everybody’s expecting a little more out of you, it’s tough coming in to the series. My teammates already having experience in the series at all the tracks that I haven’t been too, being brand new to all of this. You definitely want to hold up to everyone’s expectations and I think I put a little more pressure on myself than I need too, right now they just want to see improvement but a championship driver, championship team all my life, that’s what I strive for the series. Getting top-10’s, I’ve been content with them but that’s not what I’m aiming for. We want top fives, we want to lead laps and get those wins, so that’s what we are aiming for this year.”

    As a female racer, Zamora is adding her name to the list of other women drivers like Janet Guthrie, Shawna Robinson, Danica Patrick, Johanna Long, Natalie Decker and Halie Deegan. She explains how tough it is to stand out in such a competitive world.

    “You can’t get ahead of yourself,” she told Speedway Media. “You want to be successful in each series that you go to, be successful whether it’s go-karts or super late models. You know you can progress. I can go jump in a Cup car right now and be like, oh great she’s in a Cup car, but you have to progress at every level. You have to prove yourself and the only way you’re going to be good in a Cup car is you have to succeed at it. It’s definitely something you keep striving for and proving yourself, and you’ll definitely get to those next levels. Definitely, no rush though because if you rush yourself, it’s not going to be the outcome you want.”

    Zamora also talked about the pros and cons of being a female driver in a male-dominated sport.

    “Being a girl has its pros and cons for sure. I received a lot of love and hate, just for being a girl. It doesn’t necessarily have to do what I am doing on track, it’s the fact that I’m a girl, not a guy. I mean it helps me to get to where I am being one of the few females in the sport, then to be a smaller portion of the ones that have been successful time after time. You just want to keep proving that. But yeah, like Janet Guthrie and Lyn St. James, I really look up to both of them. A lot of the hate stuff was when I first got into stock cars and some were upset to see a 14-year old who was winning races and championships, let alone that she is a girl too.

    “I don’t think about it, honestly. It’s not a concern to me; it’s not going to affect my ability on the track. It’s just bringing a girl to the sport in such a male-dominated sport that some girls are a little too timid to get into that. It’s what I love to do and I’m not going to let anybody stop me or talk down on me for it.”

    With young drivers getting so much added pressure to get into a Cup car right away, Brittney describes whether or not it’s a realistic expectation for her.

    “Being a racecar driver or stock car driver obviously, the goal is to become a Cup driver one day,” Zamora told Speedway Media. “That’s how you know you truly made it. Being realistic, there’s only what, like 35 people in the entire world that are in the Cup Series. So chances are very slim. What I want to get out of racing is a career in any series that I can have. Whether it’s going back to the Super Late Models, or going to the track and being a threat for the win. Just to make a career out of racing would be my goal. NASCAR would be great, but I truly would be happy with racing anything in my career.”

    Brittney also kind shared what lays ahead of her for next year.

    “I would like to keep doing K&N next year full time,” Zamora continued. “I don’t think one year in the series is enough. Especially with how many tracks you go to and the competition you’re racing against. I think getting multiple years would help to really be able to prove yourself in that series and being adaptive to that series, and prepare yourself for the next level.”

    “Yeah, K&N full-time next year would be ideal. I would love to be able to make a Truck (Series) start here and there, maybe run a couple of ARCA races. That would really be ideal for next year.”

    Brittney is not being the only female racer in the K&N Series as Hailie Deegan is another up and coming star who is making a name for herself by already having two wins in the series. In fact, some may not know that Deegan is Zamora’s teammate. Even though they are teammates, they don’t interact as much as someone may think they do.

    “I think our styles are two totally different,” the Washington State driver explains. “I think we approach race day and practice day with different mindsets, the complete opposite. So we have to kind of do our own thing. You know our teams rely on each other, but we kind of keep to ourselves and focus on what we are doing. The team aspect comes into play for sets up, crew chiefs relying on each other and helping out the teams when we need it, but all three of us drivers are really independent and focus on what’s going on with our car.”

    Even though Zamora is young and it’s still early in her career, she already has a race that she wishes she can do over again.

    “I would like to do Irwindale,” she said. “I’ve had a race at that track before, so only one. I’m not like a pro at that track or anything, but it’s the only track I’ve been to on the schedule. I felt pretty confident going into it. You know, we didn’t qualify great. I qualified 11th, but within 10 laps I was up to fourth. For a top runner, we had a fast car. There were a couple of things I was feeling in the car like it getting a little tight on me. During our halfway break, we tried to fix that and it wasn’t like that anymore in the second half. You know we just kept climbing to the top.”

    “Unfortunately, we over adjusted. We went the right way, we just did too much on the car. We fell back a little bit in the second half. I think that if we would have minimized our set up changes, I think we would have been spot on. I think we would have been up there competing for the win at the end of that race.”

    One of the biggest honors of Zamora’s career so far is winning the Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award.

    “Last year when I got the call it was actually kind of shocking,” Zamora said. “I didn’t even know I was in the running for it. There were over 500 drivers eligible for this award. To know the people around the racing community voted for me, there had to be submissions. You know, people had to write a letter and vote for you. So that was truly amazing to know that people saw our efforts and saw that we would overcome our troubles, and jump into the next level and keep moving award.”

    “To have the award, the Wendell Scott Trailblazer is huge. I’m honored. I would really like to know who submitted my name and who voted for me. I would love to thank them for believing in me. It’s crazy for me because it wasn’t that great of a year looking back on it. And knowing that other people are noticing your hard work, that was really cool.”

    Asked why fans should cheer for her, Zamora said, “I feel like I go into the racing world with a different mindset and this is what I love to do. I have so much passion for it and what you see is what you get. I don’t put on a fake personality or a fake identity for the cameras, or anything. What you see is who I am. This is what I feel like I was born to do. You know when I strap in to get on the track, I feel at home. I just hope to make a good name for the females in the sport and keep showing the younger girls that we can be competitive and be successful.”

    Rapid Fire with Brittney Zamora

    SM: What’s one thing fans don’t know about you?
    Zamora: “This one is pretty cool because every time I say it, people are shocked by it. I raced for the past 15 years. In the past 14 years, I’ve done competitive dance and I’m a national champion.”

    SM: If you could be a racecar part, what would that be?
    Zamora: “Oh I would definitely be a motor. There’s just so much speed. I don’t know, they are pretty unique and special.”

    SM: Favorite track on the schedule?
    Zamora: “Bristol.”

    SM: Driver you would most like to race against in any series?
    Zamora: “Kyle Busch.”

    SM: What is your favorite social media app?
    Zamora: “Instagram.”

    SM: What is your favorite midnight snack?
    Zamora: “Salsa.”

    SM: Your favorite movie?
    Zamora: “The Blind Side.”

    SM: Your favorite TV show?
    Zamora: “Okay, everyone laughs at me for this but the Kids Baking Championship like with the kids and stuff. I’m all about competition, so I think it’s cool to watch anything like that.”

    SM: What is your favorite animal?
    Zamora: “Dog.”

    SM: Are you superstitious?
    Zamora: “Yes. I have to have a pair of race day socks that I always wear. When putting on my gloves and shoes, I always have to put on the left one first.”

    SM: Are you nervous before a race? Do you have any dreams about racing? Do you have nightmares about missing a race?
    Zamora: “I’m a little bit of both. You know, dreams about going to the track and winning. Then nightmares, you go on the track and crash, or parts break, anything like that. But yeah a little bit of both.”

    SM: Is there a food you don’t recommend eating on race day?
    Zamora: “Anything heavy or greasy. That’s a no, on race day. Stay away from all of that.”

    SM: How long does it take for the adrenaline to wear off after a race?
    Zamora: “I would probably say at least an hour or two.”

    SM: Who is your racing hero?
    Zamora: “It would be my dad (Mike Zamora) for sure. That’s who I grew up watching, admired, wanted to do everything he did.”

    SM: What or who is the most famous Twitter account that you follow?
    Zamora: “I would probably have to say Mark Martin. I don’t know, I would have to go and look. Yeah, I kind of had to look at it twice you know? Be like really? The Mark Martin?”

    SM: Who is the most famous person you have ever met?
    Zamora: “I’ve met a few Cup drivers like Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney. I would probably have to say those guys.”

    SM: Were you popular in High School?
    Zamora: “I wasn’t like super popular, but a lot of people were really interested in what I did. Racing. They would always like to hear about it. They would always have me bring like clips and stuff from racing. They wanted to see.”

    SM: Are you a morning or night owl?
    Zamora: “Night owl for sure.”

    SM: Expectations at the end of the season?
    Zamora: “The three goals that I’m dead set on achieving are top five in the championship points, I want Rookie of The Year, and yeah, I want at least a win or two this year, minimum. If we can get those three, I would be pretty happy with how this season goes. Those are the three I’m dead set on. I’m also not about the burnouts because I hate how hard they are on the motor and stuff. I kind of call it respecting our equipment. Especially because this isn’t my stuff. So no burnouts or anything. I definitely do after every win I’ve had, I do like a polish victory lap. So I would probably keep that going.”

    You can follow Brittney Zamora on Twitter @brittneyz52 and on Instagram @brittney.zamora.racing. You can also check out Brittney’s website by visiting https://brittneyzamora.com/ for all the latest news and updates.

  • Bottas takes points lead with win in Azerbaijan

    Bottas takes points lead with win in Azerbaijan

    Ferrari paced the field all weekend in practice, but then qualifying came and Charles Leclerc, who led the Ferrari charge, crashed in the second round of qualifying. Instead, Mercedes locked out the front row and it was Valtteri Bottas’ day on the streets of Baku.

    Bottas held off Lewis Hamilton on the opening lap score his fifth career Formula 1 victory. He even passed Charles Leclerc for the lead on the pit straight on Lap 32.

    The always humble Finnish driver wouldn’t say it was an easy race, even though “not that much (was) happening up front.”

    “I did not do any mistakes, but everything was under control,” Bottas said. “I’m happy to see the checkered flag and get this first place.”

    “It’s incredible as a team on which kind of level we’re performing now. I would say to the guys I’m so proud to be part of that, and we’re all performing really, really well.”

    While he missed out on the bonus point for the fastest lap, Bottas overtook Hamilton for the championship lead.

    Hamilton made a run at Bottas in the closing laps, getting into DRS range, but couldn’t catch him.

    After he congratulated Bottas, he said that his chance at victory “was all lost in qualifying.”

    Sebastian Vettel rounded out the podium.

    Max Verstappen and Leclerc, who earned the bonus point for posting the fastest lap at 1:43.009 (a new track record), rounded out the top five.

    Sergio Perez, Carlos Sainz, Lando Norris, Lance Stroll and Kimi Raikkonen rounded out the top 10.

    Race summary

    After locking out the front row, Mercedes led the field on the start, with Bottas taking charge for virtually the whole race.

    He surrendered the lead on Lap 12 to pit, and Leclerc, who started the race on medium tires, took the lead.

    His tires started to wear as he neared his stop, and Bottas ran him down and passed him on the pit straight on Lap 32.

    Hamilton pulled within DRS range in the last three laps, but couldn’t make a pass on his teammate. He ran wide in Turn 16 on the penultimate lap and couldn’t take the fight to Bottas for the final lap.

    What else happened

    Alexander Albon clipped the outside Turn 1 wall on the opening lap, and a second time halfway through the race.

    Robert Kubica, who started the race from pit road, was handed a drive through penalty for “car being driven to pit exit too early.”

    Romain Grosjean locked up and ran off track in Turn 15 on Lap 25, and later retired from the race for unrelated reasons.

    Daniel Ricciardo locked up and slid off into the runoff area in Turn 3. He was to the inside of Daniil Kvyat and collected him. While neither car was damaged by the slide, Ricciardo reversed into Kvyat. Both retired from the race, as a result.

    Pierre Gasly brought out a virtual safety car, when his car suffered a power failure and pulled into a runoff area on Lap 40.

    Nuts and bolts

    The race lasted one hour, 31 minutes and 52 seconds, at an average speed of 124.200 mph.

    There were two lead changes among two different drivers and one virtual safety car period for two laps.

    Bottas leaves Baku with a one point lead over Hamilton in the drivers championship.

    Mercedes leaves with a 74-point lead over Ferrari in the constructors championship.

    Formula 1 returns to action in two weeks, when it heads to Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona to start the European stretch of the schedule.

  • Venturini Motorsports Sweeps Only ARCA Practice At Talladega

    Venturini Motorsports Sweeps Only ARCA Practice At Talladega

    The ARCA Racing Series held its only practice session this morning at the 2.66 mile Superspeedway. To no surprise, Michael Self and Venturini Motorsports swept the top three spots in practice, thus continuing their 2019 ARCA dominance so far this season.

    Self led the trio of Venturini Motorsports drivers with a speed of 181.069 mph equalling to 52.886 seconds. Teammates Christian Eckes and Brandon Lynn rounded the top three.

    Venturini has won every race this season as a team. Harrison Burton won at Daytona, Michael Self at Five Flags Speedway and most recently at Salem Speedway a couple of weeks ago.

    Todd Gilliland was fourth, Grant Quinlan fifth, Gus Dean sixth, Andy Seuss seventh, Joe Graf Jr eighth, Travis Braden ninth, and newly announced driver for Chad Bryant Racing Ty Majeski tenth.

    Majeski will be competing for Chad Bryant Racing with six races this year starting at Talladega tonight. Majeski will also be driving for the team at Charlotte in May, Pocono, Michigan, Chicagoland and the season finale at Kansas Speedway in October.

    In other ARCA news, it was announced this morning in the social media world that current Chad Bryant Racing driver, Joe Graf Jr will be competing in select Xfinity Series races for Richard Childress Racing. Graf Jf will also be pursuing an internship at RCR as well.

    Qualifying kicks off in an hour at 3:30 p.m./ET followed by the 76 lapper General Tire 200 at 6:00 p.m./ET live on Fox Sports 1.

  • 2019 ARCA Racing Preview -Talladega

    2019 ARCA Racing Preview -Talladega

    The ARCA Racing Series continues its diverse and unique schedule this weekend at the historic Talladega Superspeedway for the annual running of the General Tire 200.

    Last year’s race featured anything a race fan could ask for and your typical Talladega race. There were seven cautions for 38 laps and the race was ran under caution for 43.7 percent.

    There were two big wrecks in the last few laps and the closest finish statistically in ARCA Series history with a computerized margin of victory of 0.00 at the finish line. The dead heat featured Zane Smith (now drives for JR Motorsports, part-time) who ended up winning the race with the ARCA officials having to use a photo to determine the winner.

    On the other side of the outcome was Joe Graf Jr. who wound up a disappointing second. Despite the heartbreaking finish, Graf Jr. had to move on quickly.

    “I moved past it and went on to the next race. Over the last twelve months, lots of things have changed. I am competing for a championship and at the time last year, I had no idea I was going to run the rest of the 2018 season. The finish at Talladega opened opportunities for me and I’m grateful.”

    Even though Graf Jr. had a disappointing finish of second, he looks forward to heading back to Talladega and upping the finish one spot forward.

    “I’m excited to get back to Talladega this weekend,” said Graf. “Obviously, everyone knows how close the finish was and I still think I won, but we can’t dwell on last year, there’s a race to be won on Friday afternoon and I want to win it.”

    Graf Jr. will pilot the No. 77 Eat Sleep Race Ford Fusion Friday afternoon.

    Other names to keep an eye on include Truck Series regular Gus Dean, who won the 2016 race a couple of years ago when, in another photo finish, he narrowly edged out Josh Williams for the win. The race was called short due to darkness and at the time, Dean was ahead of Williams and won the race.

    To this day, Dean still remembers that finish and is excited to get back to Talladega.

    “Very excited to come back to race in the ARCA Menard Series and especially at Talladega Superspeedway,” said Dean. “The victory in 2016 will be something I’ll never forget and is very important to me – but I’m ready to make new memories on Friday with Win-Tron Racing.”

    One final competitor to keep an eye on is 2018 ARCA Daytona winner Michael Self. Despite his poor Daytona finish from this year, Self returns to Talladega in hopes of a win this weekend.

    “Talladega was an up-and-down race for me last year, and fortunately ended positively overall, so maybe we can repeat that this year. I feel like I have the experience and knowledge to do well at Talladega, but there’s just so much that’s out of your hands at the superspeedways. I think we have to be smart the whole day, race around the right people and focus on staying clean and being in position to be up front at the end.”

    Upset winner?

    There have been many winners for this race. One that stands out the most could very well be Keith Segars winning his only ARCA race in 2002. Red Farmer in 1984 stands out and Kraig Kinser who won here in 2005 also stands out.

    It will be an all day event for the ARCA Racing Series.

    The only practice session kicks off Friday at 9:30 a.m. ET with group qualifying at 3:25 p.m. ET. Both events will be streamed live on Arcaracing.com.

    The General Tire 200 is slated for 6:00 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1.